IX delegates and nineteen experts are on their way to London to represent the United States in the in- ternational economic conference from which so much is expected In the ry wns Way of finding a path | EEN & out of the world de 4 ] pression. Secretary of State Cordeli Hull heads the delegation and his associates as : announced by the : White House are: James M. Cox, vice chairman, former governor and Demo- cratic Presidential candidate in 1020; Senator Key Pittman of Nevada, Demo crat; Senator James Couzens of Michigan, Republican; Representative Samuel D. McReynolds of Tennessee, Democrat. and Ralph W. Morrison of Texas, retired banker. Chief of the experts are William C, Bullitt, execu- tive officer; James P, Warburg, finan- Fred K. Nielsen, legal and Herbert Feis, chief tech- under 1 Rep. 8. D. McReynolds im} vigor cial adviser: adviser, gOrve whom will “brain nical adviser, smbers of the trust.” the delegates the one sistent McRey nolds. house © 3 and his potent in the conservative He gation. Senator Couzs publica member, has considerably modifie expectations of what the nplish, and now re prospect ao not in of internal public expenditure. An agreement on progressive re moval of restrictions on exch Ie, The int ove fr t Ha owe war debts to the United States failed in their effort to the debts in- in the nda for the economic but their delegates enter conference with the cancellation or drastic reduction of the debts their chief aim. The Roosevelt administra. tion Insists that the war debts, how- ever Important they may be, were not a major cause of the depression and are not a major remedy. Consequent- ly the parleys in London are almost certain to develop into a great battle of diplomacy, President Roosevelt has flatly de nied that be intends to negotiate new settlements of the war debts without recourse to congress. This was made necessary by dispatches from Wash. ington published in London, ‘saying Mr. Roosevelt had offered to accept from Britain £10,000,000 as part pay- ment of the $£35.000,000 due June 15. It seemed fairly certain that the British government would make this payment in full. This will be easier than before because of the devalua- tion of the dollar. Britain can either pay In paper dollars, which cost about Z per cent less to buy than gold dol lars, or in American securities, which can be bought with paper dollars at a discount and turned in at par, have cluded conference, the HAMPIONS of the gold standard in both the house and the senate had little chance as the administra tion forces pushed through the Fletcher-Steagall resolution for the abrogation of the gold clause in all governmental and private contracts, both present and future. The meas ure, asked by the President to legal ize action already taken, was first passed by the house by a vote of 2583 to 07. Twenty-eight Republicans and all five of the Farmer-Laborites joined with the Democrats in favor of the resolution. Representative Luce of Massachusetts, who led the small minority, denounced the measure as a breach of faith on the part of the government : but Chairman Steagall of the banking committee sald It was esgentinl for the recovery of national prosperity. JRYEsTICATION of the banking house of J, PP, Morgan & Co, was resumed by the senate banking com mittee, and a new list of Important persons who had recelved bargains in stocks was produced. Ferdinand Pe- cora, the committee's counsel, was persistent In his probing, but was compelled to tell the senators, In ex- ecutive session, what evidence he pro posed to introduce and what he ex- pected to prove by it, and to con- vince them of the propriety of his pur- pose. Senator Glass was still deter mined that Pecora should not bring out matter outside the committee's Jurisdiction or irrelevant to the in- quiry. Mr, Glass sald he had re- ceived a number of anonymous threats by mail and what he termed “blackguard telegrams” because of his stand. Though Willlam was on one of the Morgan “preferred” customers before he be came secretary of the treasury and hence demands for his resignation were made by various men In publie ife, Mr. Woodin declared he had not resigned. His statement left no doubt that he office if his presence there In any hindered the H. Woodin's name lists of would be willing to quit his way but that on, return of prosperity, uterpreted to mean 1 to hold More geri it also wns Mr. Roosey at lea wished | sent. rossions dealin vith international i ORE interests, rting that Mr. Davis has va in “repud Hation oF MITH WILDMAN BROOKHART Iowa, has a and serves un N. Peek work already.” “1 have gone into the mat with including the Soviet representative, Boris Skvirsky He's a pretty fine fellow and I've had several talks with him.” Mr. Skvirsky is not a trade repre sentative of the Soviet, nor has he connection with the Amtorg corpora- tion, organized by the Soviets to transact business In America. Mr. Skvirsky sald that he is a representa. tive of the Soviet foreign office, rator George “I've done a lot of he said ter people here, ERMANY has refused to accept an unfavorable report of the League of Nations on her treatment of the Jews and virtually told the league that the affair Is none of its business, The league council, how- ever, referred Juridical aspects of the issue to a committee of jurists with the understanding that the matter will have a complete airing. HEN President Roosevelt the other day selected Arthur E. Mor- gan, president of Antioch college at Yellow Springs, Ohio, as director of the vast Tennessee valley conservation project, there were many derogatory re marks about the ap- pointing of just an- | other professor for a big job. But the skep- tical ones did not know about Morgan. Since 1002, when he was just out of high | ; school, he has been active In engineering ur 8. work and has planned and supervised construction of about seventy-five water control projects. These include the important reclama. tion work in St. Francis valley in Ar. kansas and the Miami conservation project at Dayton, Ohio. He was chief engineer In the Pueblo (Colo) econ. servancy district; he drafted the re. vised drainage codes for Minnesota, Arkansas, Ohlo, Mississippl, Colorado and New Mexico, and has been con sulting engineer on drainage and flood control projects all over the pation, He ix entirely familiar with conditions in the Tennessee valley, EVERTING to the matter of the gold standard, dispatches from Vienna tell of how, In the seventieth congress of the International Chamber of Commerce, the United States was bitterly denounced by Charles Bolsse. vain of Holland for what he called its “immoral” monetary course. He condemned the behavior of those nae tions which abandon the gold stand- ard “although unquestionably in a po- sition to maintain i.” He condemned also what he described as the “repudi. ation” of the gold clause In contracts by the United States. In the transportation section. Ira Campbell of New York defended Unit. ed States shipping against what he termed an international attempt to rule it off the seas. American mer- chant marine cannot exist without sub- sidy, he sald, and an International agreement to abolish subsidies would mean the abolition of American ships, W. L. Runeiman of Great Britain objected to his argument that the American marine Ig needed for nation. al defense, asserting such argument Is out of place In a commercial eon. gress, War debts also eame up for discus. slon, W, H. Coates, British delegate, asserting that they must he settled before it would be possible to Improve world economic conditions, N ILITARY representatives of Ja 4 pan and China signed a formal armistice in the warfare in north China at Tangkn, where the negotia- gions took place under the guns of Japanese naval craft. The tru« provides for den 1 tion of the the wail on the north Peiping-M area bounded by great I ANSING nitentiar 4 4 Leavenworth, Kan. was the scene sational escape of 11 convicts ed by Wilbur Underhill, a of the most Southwest, Warden were and one desperate During a Prather and used as accompany the we of the baseball game two guards seized, shields and forced to fleeing convicis over the wall guards disarmed and the got away in the car of the prison farm superintendent, keeping prisoners with them as hostages un- tii hours later, when they were re. leased in Oklahoma, In their flight they commandeered two were men set free near Pleasanton, Kans, IX bandits held up the State Ex. change bank of Culver, Ind. and fled in an automobile with £16.000. But the men of the town had been trained as vigilantes and, receiving word of the crime, they mobilized im. mediately under command of Captain Obenanf of the Culver Military acad- emy and went into action. Result: AH six bandits were captured, one of them beigg fatally wounded, and the loot was recovered, NE hundred thousand spectators saw Louis Meyer of California win the 500-mile automobile race at the Indianapolis speedway in record. breaking time, They also saw a series of fatal accidents that sadly marred the great spectagie. Three men were killed and three others were badly injured. Mark Billman of In. dianapolis was crushed to death when he lost control of his car and It crashed into the retaining wall, and Elmer Lombard, his mechanle, was hurt. Later the car driven by Mal comb Fox of New Jersey lost a wheel and skidded into the middle of the track where it was smashed by the car of Lester Spangler of los An. geles, Spangler and G. IL. Jordan, his mechanic, lost their lives, and Bert Cook, Fox's mechanic, was in Jured, In a test run the day before the big race Willlam Denver and Robert Hurst lost their lives, Meyer completed the run in 4 hours and 48 minutes, his average speed be He won $12,000 first prize money and $1,150 in lap prizes, ©. 1927, Western Newspaper Union, i 1 Washington.—It begins to appear lke the summer will be hot insofar as the prohibition con- Battleto troversy is con- cerned. Indeed, as Wax Hot the situation now is neither prohibitionists nor antl-prohibitionists propose to allow any grass to grow under their feet, The motto of each side seems to be: “now or never” Observers here belleve that Post- master General “Jim” Farley, continu. ing the political astuteness of the last campaign, rather caught the prohibi- tionists taking a nap. I mean that the prohibitionists were plodding along throughout the country with their ef- forts but were putting forth no real campaign attacks, Mr. Farley broke out suddenly with a brand new idea and ald the pressure of the Roosevelt administration on the movement to repeal the Eighteenth amendment Of course, when Mr. Farley told the country that by ratification of the re peal proposal It would automatically end the extra taxes that levied under the public works bill, he was favored by a condition not avall- He offer outlined, had to be able to the prohibition supporters, wns, therefore, Wy to some inducement iot been presented far prohit new elemen I ads ill be ren ition n ert to shi Drys Are Not Idle Pantist the Northern Bantis convent convent in the RR resojut wl the delegates agreed to avold patronizing ling beer. The vote to adopt such a policy was lopsided, but one of the ministers told me he had some difficulty in find Ing a place to eat In the Capital City where no beer was sold the Impracticability of such a polley does not avershadow the fighting spirit that Is displayed, Another illustration : scattered throughout the auditorium where the resgions were held were signs and post. ers which read “No quarter to the Hquor interest: thousands of quar ters to fight them.” or words to that effect, businesses sel Nevertheless, constitute evidence of what is going on throughout the country. The In. stances were with reference to only one church, but there Is much the same attitude on the part of all the churches, Thelr leaders and those who, though not participating directly in the church movement, are sincerely dry, are not going to be licked while they twiddle their thumbs, [I recall having written in one of these letters several months ago that the question of repeal was probably going to be decided around the firesides of hundreds of thousands of homes In the land. The circum. stances now developed convince me more strongly than ever that such will be the case. 0 The wets are claiming buoyantly that they will win repeal. Dry lead: ers here are just as certain that they can stop repeal. On the side of the wets Is the gigantic vote they devel oped at the Chicago convention of the Democratic party and the compromise poeition forced on the Republicans in convention In the same city. The Re publicans did compromise, because the resubmission plank did not represent the original position of either faction. On the other side, the drys point to the fact it is necessary for repeal to fall In only thirteen states to defent the proposal that restores liquor con. trol to the states. And shen you look over a list of states, you will pote a good many of them that have voted dry over and over sgain. But we must not forget the power- ful leverage that Mr, Farley exerted in the matter of taxes, I think it is a fact that there Is not a state in the union where taxes are not the subject of complaint, The taxes laid by the federal government also have been criticized plentifully during the depres- gion, Bo when the President says and are necessary to pay for public work to stimulate business recovery, it is not unnatural that & mighty howl was heard, It always Is easy to complain about taxes and it is easier to com- plain about them in hard times Mr. Farley waving the magle wand, promptly told congress and the coun- be repealed If prohibition would be re- pealed. They went be In month longer than the amendment, sald the administration. Taxes from liquor than offset the levies lately pr for the records taxes In amendment was will more that the CONEress, show liquor Eighteen the dave before adopt ed HK. were yie gomething lie £7 O00 ans The present addition to the tax li will produce only an esti ProbeMorganun Secrets ile the ea been cut by a senate { that pate Is not entitled to be praised h for After all, It may asked properly what has been se House seems to me, however, the its Soh, complished, It the of Morgan, it is true. It showed that Jd. P. Morgan, the and the present head of the firm, escaped pay- ment of income taxes in two years, and it got oodles of publicity for Indl “ye xposed ’ younger, as smearing the names of gome known persons because they once had dealt with the House of Morgan, It showed as well that Mz, Morgan had used his brains to comply with the very tax laws congress enacted and yet had escaped tax because he had received no income as congress had defined that word, . "0 One result may be, and 1 believe It 12 the only one, that thére will be some revigion of the tax Tax Revision laws to prevent a re- Likely the country’s richest men escaping in- come tax, It is difficult to foresee anything else of a helpful nature that can come from the “show” staged by the senate committee. The reason is a practical and simple one, As ex. plained above, the House of Morgan is a private banking firm which by long and honest operation has builded a confidence among the people of wealth who deposited their money with the private firm, It erestad good will Just as the local merchant in your town has done, by preserving to those who were its customers the rights they were entitled to have. That local mer chant, by the way, could accept money on deposit If he wanted to and his customers wanted to make them. There ia nothing to prevent him from it. Thus, through the years, the Morgan partners continued to receive funds on deposit until at last reports there was something like $255,000000 on deposit with them. Like other Liz banks, the House of Morgan made much money. It made vast profit doing what com- mercial banks could not do without having another corporation handle the transactions, and that was sell securi- tien, © 1938, Wertern Newspaper Union, Howe About: Martin Johnson Virtue Among Kings Railroads By ED HOWE LTHOUGH born in a country town in Kansas, there is a famous and rich man named Martin Johnson, All be had to start with was a good desl of natural sense (as wost people have), and good parents and hbors to teach him the importance of ness, fairness and industry Probably at first he was to fight Indians and hunt buff was soon able to underst ney polite Happening on a book about determined to go there to take moving pletures of big game animals them alive for sale to parks and now lives in wonderful adventures and audiences in people, Anyone who Johnson because body, Is a cad. decency Johnson's ax has been a { who And I like his wife Oss from Kans them : wonder qd The movi about all the money feals are not 2 vide with poor ; t made on manufacturers and other fn! persone who haven't ans One “movie” man In He lately authorized his broadeast the statement come from salary million 8 year, The class one raliroads group comprising all lagt year lost more than a and fifty million dollars suggest the demand is use lirwood Dress that his In agent to was half a alone {meaning a the best ones) hundred A agninst of sixteen million In 10381 the year of this terrific deficit, the class one railroads gave employment to hundreds of thousands does not join the government and courts in efforts to further impov- But how the “movies.” of no use to It Is another exhibition of the Amer ican spirit, unintelligent and dishonest. that must be changed before the coun. try can again get on its feet. © - - Nothing is ever seftled. When © wae & boy I heard quarreling which greatly disturbed those taking part. I have heard the same quarreling about the same subjects within an hour, now that I am in my eightieth year. If, after death. I am restored to con- sciousness 1 shall be surprised. but whether 1 land in the bosom of Abra. ham or in the clutches of the devil T think I shall appreciate once knowing positively where I am at. - - - Everyone knows you are a weak creature; you will finally admit it yourself after reaching considerable age. I can offer no advice here except that everyone become as strong as pos- sible. Emergencies are always coming up, and a little strength and sense will be found of great value in considering them, *. » - It hans actually been proposed that the government do something te pre vent earthquakes: several congress. men have bills ready as soon as they beelh campaigning again, “E1923. Pell Syndicate. 1 NU Borviee